Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

These lamps are turned on when you pull their nipples.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The felt pieces by designer Naama Arbel have silicon covers over the switches and LED light source.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The switches must be pulled outwards to turn the lamps on and pushed inwards to turn them off.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

Arbel designed the series while studying at Seminar Hakibbutzim in Israel.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The series is composed of five different amorphous and geometries creatures.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The objects suggest different approach to the interaction of human with lighting. This new approach emphasises the human touch, the game and the sensual experience to intensify the general experience.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The product is handmade and produced using traditional felt techniques.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

Those objects, which are made of felt, take us back to our childhood games and our basic needs. The light creatures awaken by touch. They are activated by stretching the silicon nipple which activates the lighting mechanism. Leaving the nipple will result turning it off.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The lightning mechanism which was developed for this project is built from combining “REVEL” LEDs and an electronic device that controls the lightning volume.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel

The device is connected by wire to the silicon nipple. When pulling the nipple the wire is stretched and activates the light volume control.

Nipple lights by Naama Arbel


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Leone Series 01 by
Lanzavecchia + Wai
Rhubarb by Emma Marga BlancheGrowing Vases by
Nendo for Lasvit

Tribal DDB office by i29

Tribal DDB office by i29

Walls, ceilings, furniture and lighting are covered in grey felt at this advertising office in Amsterdam by Dutch interior architects i29.

Tribal DDB office by i29

Felt was selected for its sound-absorbing properties and to integrate the different surfaces and existing structural elements with one gesture.

Tribal DDB office by i29

It also served to cover the scars where parts of the building had been demolished or altered.

Tribal DDB office by i29

Designed for Tribal DDB Amsterdam, the offices accommodate 80 members of staff.

Tribal DDB office by i29

See more interiors by i29 here.

Here are some more details from i29:


Tribal DDB office

Tribal DDB Amsterdam is a highly ranked digital marketing agency and part of DDB international, worldwide one of the largest advertising offices. i29 interior architects designed their new offices for about 80 people.

Tribal DDB office by i29

With Tribal DDB our goal was to create an environment where creative interaction is supported and to achieve as much workplaces as possible in a new structure with flexible desks and a large open space. All of this while maintaining a work environment that stimulates long office hours and concentrated work. As Tribal DDB is part of an international network a clear identity was required, which also fits the parent company DDB. The design had to reflect an identity that is friendly and playful but also professional and serious. The contradictions within these questions, asked for choices that allow great flexibility in the design.

Tribal DDB office by i29

Situated in a building where some structural parts could not be changed it was a challenge to integrate these elements in the design and become an addition to the whole. i29 searched for solutions to various problems which could be addressed by one grand gesture. At first a material which could be an alternative to the ceiling system, but also to cover and integrate structural parts like a big round staircase. Besides that, acoustics became a very important item, as the open spaces for stimulating creative interaction and optimal usage of space was required.

Tribal DDB office by i29

This led us to the use of fabrics. It is playful, and can make a powerful image on a conceptual level, it is perfect for absorbing sound and therefore it creates privacy in open spaces. And we could use it to cover scars of demolition in an effective way. There is probably no other material which can be used on floors, ceiling, walls and to create pieces of furniture and lampshades than felt. It’s also durable, acoustic, fireproof and environment friendly. Which doesn’t mean it was easy to make all of these items in one material!

Tribal DDB office by i29

i29 always looks for choices that answer to multiple questions at the same time. They tell a conceptual story about the company, the space and the users of the space. They deal with specific practical and functional issues and they have to have some autonomous quality as well. These ‘levels’ are intertwined; one leads you to the other. If you see how smart it serves it purpose practically it leads you to the company. If you see the powerful image that is non-depended, it leads you to the functionality, and round it goes.

Tribal DDB office by i29

At i29 we believe that simplicity builds character. Compare it to a human being; strong individuals always have one or few characteristics that stand out. We all know how hard it is to stay focused on the one thing that is most important to you. The same way it is with a design. The result of being very selective is that you have to push the one choice to the limit. It also provides a field of tension, and gives energy to a space without fail into chaos. But more importantly it leaves you with a charismatic environment.

Tribal DDB office by i29

Client: Tribal DDB Amsterdam
Design: i29 l interior architects
Size: 650 m2

Tribal DDB office by i29

Constructor: Slavenburg
Interior build: Zwartwoud
Materials: white epoxy flooring, felt, hpl, steel
Furniture: lighting & furniture objects custom made


See also:

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Power Office
by i29
No Picnic by
Elding Oscarson
OneSize by
Origins Architects

Felt Computer Mouse

E’ raro trovare device in campo tecnologico che non siano fatti di plastica. Delle volte spuntano prototipi come questo mouse in feltro e legno disegnato da Joey Roth. Non sappiamo se verrà messo in produzione, sicuramente poco ergonomico, appare comunque un oggetto interessante.
{Via}

Felt Computer Mouse

Felt Computer Mouse

Felt Computer Mouse

Pod by Benjamin Hubert for Devorm

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Milan 2011: London designer Benjamin Hubert launched this chair with a pressed-felt shell at Ventura Lambrate in Milan last month.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Hubert talks about the design for Dutch brand Devorm in this interview Dezeen filmed with him in Milan for Dezeen Screen.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Called Pod, the chair has a steam-bent ash frame while the seat is pressed in one piece from felt made of recycled plastic bottles.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

The product comes flat-packed and the shells stack inside each other for transportation.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Cushions are made of recycled foam with fabric covers in contrasting colours.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

More about Benjamin Hubert on Dezeen »

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

More about Ventura Lambrate on Dezeen »

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Here are some more details from Hubert:


Pod

Benjamin Hubert x Devorm

The ‘Pod’ is a large privacy chair for breakout areas in offices or residential projects.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Pod is an environmental alternative to large upholstered furniture. Most upholstery is difficult to recycle as it’s a fixed combination of timber, glue, foam and textile.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Pod tackles this by replacing the large upholstery with moulded felt created from recycled PET bottles. In addition the entire design is knock down with the shells stacking for minimum carbon footprint in transportation and storage.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

The chair’s ergonomics allow the user to work comfortably whilst feeling relaxed and separated from the hustle and bustle of daily life. It creates a room-in-room experience with the perimeter of the chair around the user’s head.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

The shell of the chair is the largest form ever produced utilising pressed PET felt technology. This felt allows a distinctive aesthetic as well as offering sound-dampening properties to increase the sensation of privacy with acoustic performance.

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Recycled PET felt
Steam bent ash timber
Recycled foam cushions with kvadrat upholstery.
h 130cm x w 95cm x d 80cm

Pod by Benjamin Hubert

Pod by Benjamin Hubert


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See also:

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Felt Up by
Charlotte Kingsnorth
Dressed Up Furniture by
KAMKAM
Nobody Chair by
Komplot

Felt VintageTV Case

Se siete in cerca di una VintageTV Case in feltro per il vostro iPhone, fate un check qui.

Felt VintageTV Case

Felt VintageTV Case

Spook by Iskos-Berlin for Blå Station

Spook by Iskos-Berlin for Blå Station

Stockholm 2011: Copenhagen designers Aleksej Iskos and Boris Berlin of Iskos-Berlin present this armchair made from a single sheet of felt at Stockholm Furniture Fair this week.

Spook by Iskos-Berlin for Blå Station

Called Spook, the design for Swedish brand Blå Station is completely hollow with no frame or support.

Spook by Iskos-Berlin for Blå Station

The seat is made from a sheet of polyester felt, pressed and made rigid.

Spook by Iskos-Berlin for Blå Station

The two designers met through their work for Danish studio Komplot – see their Nobody Chair made of pressed felt in our earlier story.

Stockholm Furniture fair continues until 12 February. See all our coverage of the event here »

The information that follows is from Blå Station:


Spook by Iskos-Berlin

Design is normally preoccupied with the idea of having full control over functions, forms, materials and so on. But why not be more forgiving and let materials behave as they “want” to behave according to their nature? Why not give an object the freedom to be “abnormal”? To be unique? Spook is a statement of opposition to the masculine striving for the submission of material, for overall perfection that tolerates no disobedience, no mistakes.

A flat felt mat, draped into a three-dimensional shape, creates natural folds that later stiffen in the production process – folds that never twice fall in quite the same way. Each chair, being almost the same, becomes different. “Mistakes” are forgiven. They give life, they are accepted – no discards, no rejects! Spook chair is a mono-block produced in a single process using only polyester felt material. There is no frame of any kind, nor any additional materials like screws, glue or reinforcements. It is a 100% recyclable material.


See also:

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Axel Bjurström
at Stockholm 2011
Luca Nichetto
at Stockholm 2011
Inga Sempé
at Stockholm 2011

Felt Case Fuzzy Wuzzy

Solo 15$ per questo case in feltro simil-leica. La vostra compatta ringrazia!
{Via}

Felt Case Keeps Cameras Cosy

Dressed Up Furniture by KAMKAM

Furniture by KAMKAM

Seoul designers KAMKAM have designed a collection of felt-covered furniture that can be fastened using buttons, belts and zips.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Above: Cham Bench

Called Dressed Up Furniture, the range includes a bench, cabinets and stools, which all have little areas for storage, hidden behind a felt door.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Here’s some more information from the designers:


‘Dressed up furniture series’.
This series is made up of four items, Dressed up stool, Cham, Cham bench and Belt felt.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Dressed up stool
The button on this personified stool is not just a visual effect but a new experience of extended actions such as storing, opening and closing doors.

Furniture by KAMKAM

The upholstery can be locked by the three buttons on the side and also fixed by rolling it up using a magnet when you store something inside.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Above: Belt Felt

The highly elastic soft sponge of upper side guarantees durability of the comfortable seat.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Cham
“Cham” is mingled with clothes in terms of functional and shape.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Above: Dressed Up Stool

Consumers can experience more flexible and higher level of ‘Opening’ and ‘Closing(Locking)’ with this little cabinet which is formed by upholstery method.

Furniture by KAMKAM

It can be fastened by the belt or the inner magnet which fixes the belt-door rolled.

Furniture by KAMKAM

The size of the door can store little sundries.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Above: Cham

The furniture is named after the North Pole monster ‘Cham’, a character of Korean novel.

Furniture by KAMKAM

The shape of the furniture ‘Cham’ has soft appearance that resembled mild and comforts people by the inherent intimacy. This is a reddot design award winning product 2010.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Cham bench

The series of ‘Cham’, mixed of clothes and bench. Using elastic sponge on upper side and finishing the external with Upholstery method, ‘Cham-bench’ will give you durable comfort.

Furniture by KAMKAM

Belt felt
‘Union’, the theme of “Belt Felt,” is structurally applied clothes and furniture.

Furniture by KAMKAM

The clothing concept ‘belt’ blended to furniture has functionality that assigns flexibility to opening and closing doors.

Furniture by KAMKAM

The fabric, which is not woven, but compressed by strong heat and moisture, emphasizes the theme ‘Union.’

Furniture by KAMKAM

This collection is on exhibition in Seoul, Korea

Furniture by KAMKAM

Furniture by KAMKAM


See also:

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An Furniture by
KAMKAM
Close to be Open by
Agnes Ögren & Valerie Otte
More furniture
on Dezeen

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

London designers Raw Edges present furniture made from 326 metres of coiled felt at Fat Galerie in Paris.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

Each object is made by wrapping strips of felt around wooden structures and coating one side in silicon, which soaks into the fibres to form a rigid object.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

Prototypes of the project were first shown at Ten Small Atlases in Milan last April.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

The exhibition opens today and continues until 15 January 2011.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

The information that follows is from Raw Edges:


The Coiling Collection
Yael Mer & Shay Alkalay – Raw-Edges

A collection of interior objects made out of 100% Woollen felt and silicon –2010

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

Long strip of felt is coiled and formed into a three dimensional body. One side of the felt is being left in its natural softness, where the other side is saturated with silicon. The felt absorbs the silicon into its fibres and together they set into a hybrid material with structural build.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

The principle has been inspired by composite materials, a combination between bonding and structural materials, similar to reinforce concrete or the ancient cob set from mud and straw.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

The show in FAT Galerie Paris includes seven new prototypes made out of 326 meters of felt in total.

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

1. Standing Bowl
16 Meter of 9mm Grey Felt + Pink Silicon + Sapele wood

2. Coffee Table – 60cm Diameter
54 Meter of 5mm Terracotta Felt + Brown Silicon – Mixture of Wood

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

3. Dark Green Stool
46 Meter of 3mm Dark Green felt + Dark Green Silicon + Sapele wood

4. Orange Stool
30 Meter of 5mm Orange felt + Orange Silicon + Sapele wood

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

5. BFA Stool
64 Meter of 3mm Green/Yellow felt + Dark Green Silicon + Sapele wood

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges

6. Grey Chair
22 Meter of 9mm Grey felt + Dark Grey Silicon + Beech wood

6. Rug

94 Meter of 2mm Light Blue Felt + Light Grey Silicon

The Coiling Collection by Raw Edges


See also:

.

Coiled by BCXSY for
Editions in Craft
Thermal Till Paper Vessels
by Philippe Malouin
More work by
Raw Edges

Fury! by Roel-jan Elsinga

Milan 2010: Dutch designer Roel-jan Elsinga has created an angry little felt-covered chair called Fury! (more…)